The Prince George Citizen

GUEST EDITORIAL Oversteppi­ng his bounds

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When the clerk of the B.C. legislatur­e, Craig James, and the sergeantat-arms, Gary Lenz, were summarily escorted out of the building last week, the immediate question was: Why the perp walk? Apparently, the two men are subjects of a criminal investigat­ion, which explains their suspension (with pay).

But when no charges have been laid, and we are told the investigat­ion has been underway for two months, the reputation­destroying manner in which James and Lenz were treated is a disgrace. They could easily have been informed of their suspension out of the public eye.

But the matter I want to explore is, what in heaven’s name has the Speaker, Darryl Plecas, been up to? It seems he developed unrevealed suspicions in January, and hired a “special adviser,” Alan Mullen, to investigat­e. Mullen was a longtime friend of his.

It was Mullen’s findings that led Plecas to go to the legislatur­e and tell what he had discovered. That, in turn, led to the suspension­s of James and Lenz.

First off, if Plecas had concerns, what was he doing hiring a special adviser? Why didn’t he go either to the attorney general or the RCMP?

Second, it appears Plecas had other suspicions as well. What were these?

It’s important here to remember the Speaker’s role. He is not a private detective. He is not paid to run some kind of undercover investigat­ion.

He is no less, and no more, than the servant of the assembly. There was a famous incident in the history of this role, when King Charles I marched into the English parliament and ordered the Speaker to produce five members suspected of treason.

Charles was told by that official, William Lenthall: “Your Majesty, I have neither eyes to see nor tongue to speak in this place but as the House is pleased to direct me, whose servant I am here.”

That certainly doesn’t seem to reflect Plecas’ views of the job.

For here is the issue. The Speaker, by the nature of his position, is privy to all manner of confidenti­al informatio­n.

Some of that relates to the conduct of MLAs and ministers, some of it concerns the behaviour of employees at the legislatur­e.

In that capacity, it is essential he conduct himself in a manner that respects the confidence placed in him. You don’t do that by secretly hiring a special adviser with an undisclose­d mandate to rummage through goings-on at the legislatur­e.

What assurance do members have that they are not also being investigat­ed, when this entire process has been hidden from sight?

I’m not suggesting that members are indeed being investigat­ed. I am suggesting that, in the present circumstan­ces, they have no means of knowing what their servant has been up to. And now we hear that one of the MLAs, Mary Polak, had sworn an affidavit that the night before the sergeantat-arms was suspended, Plecas tried to get Mullen appointed to the job.

The best that can be said of the Speaker’s decision to advocate the appointmen­t of a longtime friend is that it showed dreadful judgment.

I can find only one example in Canada where a Speaker was removed from his office. In 1875, Nova Scotia’s House of Assembly passed a motion proposing that the Speaker’s resignatio­n be requested. The individual in question resigned.

Perhaps a few more revelation­s are needed if that is to happen here. But we are already deep in uncharted territory. Who knows what comes next?

— Lawrie McFarlane, Victoria Times-Colonist

It’s important here to remember the Speaker’s role. He is not a private detective.

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